Considering UCL have the other half of the Nambian Phosphate projects I wonder if MAK have run the ruler over them?
I know BON was a good fit given shared directors and thus they already held a decent size of BON but if anything I think this is why BON went so cheap to MAK
Uh oh, Takeover for BON from their JV in Namibia. I hope MAK don't up their bid in response, they're throwing away enough money as it is.
I never really liked BON, LN. Maybe I just don't understand marine phos, but the grades are crap. Where's the beneficiation plant?Hmmm never thought it would go this way, reckon MAK should just go after UCL to finish it all off,
I think its wise of MAK to de-risk by having a second project on the back burner but doubt they wanted to get into a battle for BON, be interesting to see how it all pan's out
Hi Kennas
Yes, I feel it is very undervalued, I have been following mak for a long time and tend to take all info on-board.
Reasons/risks for the low price other than obvious.
-some people have doubts over transport logistics, however I am confident this is not an issue or transport experts (Bill Gibbins) would not be offering a transport solution at a set price.
-the need for pre-feasibility results, laying out clearly opex. I suspect pre-feas will cover various production models including a super low capex option using contract transport and mining. To give the project more certainty to the broader investment community independent opex estimates definitely will help. Suspect opex will be in the $90-120 range for the low capex fast startup option. This will be fine for the first few year but will need to be reduced though a rail link to tenant creek over the longer term.
-metallurgy-very important and results will be included in pre-feas. Early indication from the work rio did and what AD has said, indicate the rp is suitable to be used to produce fertilizer and has low levels of contaminates. However risk still exists. Metallurgy could well be the reason DSO will not go ahead. They should have a good bit of ore grading over 30% but it still might need sieving/washing to remove minor contaminates. I suspect if they ship any dso it will only be for the first few ship loads while the build the benefication plant.
-Phosphate price-Morrocco have a monopoly on exported rp. They have threatened to produce heaps more rp and crush the price back to $100/t. This has had a significant effect on the share price. Question is do you believe their propaganda? I don't. (will post something on this later if you are interested).
-Share price decline (downtrend), a lot of traders held this when it went 20c to $2+, most have now sold this hasn't help the share price. Mak has attracted a lot of traders(bots etc) who don't appreciate the underling fundamentals, this also hasn't done the share price any favours. Hopefully mak is attracting more long term holders to the register (who have done their research and appreciate what mak has) and next time it goes up it will be a bit slow and sustained.
I keep looking but can't see any reason atm mak won't succeed and be potentially massively profitable. Yes there are risks but atm they don't look significant. Nothing is ever certain though.
Can you let me know where you see risks in mak not succeeding, as I would like to discuss them.
Cheers
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